icinga2/lib/icinga/user.hpp
Yonas Habteab 91c7e60df8 Replace all existing copyright headers with SPDX headers
I've used the following command to replace the original copyright header
lines in a C-style comment block:

```
$ find . \( -type d \( -name '\..*' -o -name third-party -o -name scripts -o -name prefix -o -name malloc -o -name server -o -name docker -o -name build -o -name doc \) -prune \) -o -type f -exec perl -pi -e 's{/\*[^*]*\(\s*c\s*\)\s*(\d{4})\s*Icinga\s+GmbH[^*]*\*/}{// SPDX-FileCopyrightText: \1 Icinga GmbH <https://icinga.com>\n// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later}gi' {} +
```

For files that use shell-style comments (#) like CMakeLists.txt, I've
used this command:

```
$ find . \( -type d \( -name '\..*' -o -name third-party -o -name scripts -o -name prefix -o -name malloc -o -name server -o -name docker -o -name build -o -name doc \) -prune \) -o -type f -exec perl -pi -e 's{#.*\(\s*c\s*\)\s(\d{4})\sIcinga\s+GmbH.*}{# SPDX-FileCopyrightText: \1 Icinga GmbH <https://icinga.com>\n# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later}gi' {} +
```

And for SQL files:

```
$ find . \( -type d \( -name '\..*' -o -name third-party -o -name scripts -o -name prefix -o -name malloc -o -name server -o -name docker -o -name build -o -name doc \) -prune \) -o -type f \( -name '*.sql' \) -exec perl -pi -e 's{--.*\(c\)\s(\d{4})\sIcinga\sGmbH.*}{-- SPDX-FileCopyrightText: \1 Icinga GmbH <https://icinga.com>\n-- SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later}gi' {} +
$ find . \( -type d \( -name '\..*' -o -name third-party -o -name scripts -o -name prefix -o -name malloc -o -name server -o -name docker -o -name build -o -name doc \) -prune \) -o -type f \( -name '*.sql' \) -exec perl -pi -e 's{-- Copyright \(c\)\s(\d{4})\sIcinga\s+Development\sTeam.*}{-- SPDX-FileCopyrightText: \1 Icinga GmbH <https://icinga.com>\n-- SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later}gi' {} +
```
2026-02-04 14:00:05 +01:00

62 lines
1.9 KiB
C++

// SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2012 Icinga GmbH <https://icinga.com>
// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
#ifndef USER_H
#define USER_H
#include "icinga/i2-icinga.hpp"
#include "icinga/user-ti.hpp"
#include "icinga/timeperiod.hpp"
#include "remote/messageorigin.hpp"
namespace icinga
{
/**
* A User.
*
* @ingroup icinga
*/
class User final : public ObjectImpl<User>
{
public:
DECLARE_OBJECT(User);
DECLARE_OBJECTNAME(User);
User();
void AddGroup(const String& name);
/* Notifications */
TimePeriod::Ptr GetPeriod() const;
Array::Ptr GetTypes() const override;
void SetTypes(const Array::Ptr& value, bool suppress_events, const Value& cookie) override;
Array::Ptr GetStates() const override;
void SetStates(const Array::Ptr& value, bool suppress_events, const Value& cookie) override;
void ValidateStates(const Lazy<Array::Ptr>& lvalue, const ValidationUtils& utils) override;
void ValidateTypes(const Lazy<Array::Ptr>& lvalue, const ValidationUtils& utils) override;
protected:
void Stop(bool runtimeRemoved) override;
void OnAllConfigLoaded() override;
private:
mutable std::mutex m_UserMutex;
// These attributes represent the actual User "types" and "states" attributes from the "user.ti".
// However, since we want to ensure that the type and state bitsets are always in sync with those attributes,
// we need to override their setters, and this on the hand introduces another problem: The virtual setters are
// called from within the ObjectImpl<User> constructor, which obviously violates the C++ standard [^1].
// So, in order to avoid al this kind of mess, these two attributes have the "no_storage" flag set, and
// their getters/setters are pure virtual, which means this class has to provide the implementation of them.
//
// [^1]: https://isocpp.org/wiki/faq/strange-inheritance#calling-virtuals-from-ctors
AtomicOrLocked<Array::Ptr> m_Types;
AtomicOrLocked<Array::Ptr> m_States;
};
}
#endif /* USER_H */